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Case Records of the Massachusetts General Hospital
Weekly Clinicopathological Exercises
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Volume 348:2125-2132 May 22, 2003 Number 21
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Case 16-2003 — A 58-Year-Old Woman with Left-Sided Weakness and a Right Frontal Brain Mass
Robert M. Friedlander, M.D., R. Gilberto Gonzalez, M.D., Nadeem A. Afridi, M.D., and Rolf Pfannl, M.D.

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Presentation of Case

A 58-year-old, right-handed woman was admitted to the hospital because of left hemiparesis.

The patient had been well until five days earlier, when a right frontal headache developed, with radiation to the right eye and right ear; suspecting sinusitis, her physician prescribed amoxicillin. Four days before admission, weakness developed in the left arm, and she began to drop items that she was holding in her left hand. During the next three days, the weakness worsened. On the day of admission, she awoke with weakness in the left leg; at one point, she fell from a chair and was unable to . . . [Full Text of this Article]

Differential Diagnosis

Important Features

Brain Abscesses

Neoplasms

Conclusions

Clinical Diagnosis

Dr. Robert M. Friedlander's Diagnosis

Pathological Discussion

Anatomical Diagnosis


Source Information

From the Department of Neurosurgery, Brigham and Women's Hospital (R.M.F.); the Divisions of Neuroradiology (R.G.G.), Cardiology (N.A.A.), and Neuropathology (R.P.), Massachusetts General Hospital; and the Departments of Neurosurgery (R.M.F.), Radiology (R.G.G.), Medicine (N.A.A.), and Pathology (R.P.), Harvard Medical School — all in Boston.


Related Letters:

Case 16-2003 — Brain Abscess
Mundia M., Edelstein P. H., Friedlander R. M., Slotkin J. R.
Extract | Full Text | PDF  
N Engl J Med 2003; 349:1004-1006, Sep 4, 2003. Correspondence

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